I don't treat Tiffany often, she's not that big of an eater to begin with.  I 
don't want to fill her up on junk.  But given the chance,  she LOVES her 
sweets.  We aren't big chocolate eaters here but I keep what we do have out of 
her reach.

-------------- Original message -------------- 
From: sheila weaver <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
My nine chic's love cookies,altho,I try to be careful
what kind I give mine,no chocolate at all.I have one
small chic that has seizers and has to take a pill
twice a day,so I give her a treat for taking it,now
all of them know when I give it to her and they expect
to have one too.lol
--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> Tiffany found a NutterButter cookie that my daughter
> left laying around. She scarfed that baby down and
> looked positively blissful lol.
> 
> 
> 
> -------------- Original message
> ----------------------
> From: "marsha" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > 
> > A lot of people feed a raw diet or a barf diet. I
> do not have a lot of knowledge 
> > of those, so I wont comment on them and will save
> that for others who do, but I 
> > do know that those diets are different from
> scraps. Those diets are specifically 
> > prepared with the nutritional needs of the dog in
> mind. Feeding scraps fails to 
> > take into consideration those needs.
> > 
> > Personally, I don't allow my chis ANY table food.
> There are too many additives 
> > and salt ect in table food, but my family sneaks
> them treats all the time. 
> > Against my wishes, lol. I don't think there is
> really anything wrong with the 
> > occasional treat or taste of what is on your
> plate, as long as it is not 
> > something toxic to dogs (research toxic foods!!)
> BUT, I would definitely not 
> > feed them table scraps as their source of food.
> > 
> > Cottage cheese and yogurt are great for dogs with
> upset stomachs and I keep it 
> > on hand for them at all times. Corn is not
> dangerous and is used as a filler in 
> > most dog foods, but it has little or no
> nutritional value. green beans are often 
> > recommended by vets as something to use for
> overweight dogs...it curbs hunger 
> > but has few calories, so if a dog is overweight
> from over eating (and not due to 
> > a medical condition) greenbeans are good to add to
> their dog food to help fill 
> > them up.
> > 
> > Make sure that you give the same safety
> considerations to the dog's meat as you 
> > would for yourself. Keeping them safe from
> salmonella poisoning, ect. Do not 
> > give them any cooked bones in the meat and
> supervise if you choose to give 
> > uncooked bones.
> > 
> > Broccoli, asparagus, and carrots.....I do not know
> if these are toxic for dogs 
> > or not...maybe someone else will know.....
> > 
> > Marsha
> > 
> > ----- Original Message ----- 
> > From: Barry 
> > To: [email protected] 
> > Sent: Wednesday, January 10, 2007 10:40 AM
> > Subject: [Chihuahuas] Table Scraps
> > 
> > 
> > Hi All,
> > First question, Bitsy our new pup will eat
> almost
> > anything she is just 8 weeks old. Any pros or
> cons on feeding table scraps
> > to our new chihuahua.
> > She eats asparagus, broccoli, carrots, green
> beans, meat, chicken
> > and cottage cheese, added to kibble.
> > Not all at once of course.
> > Barry and Sue 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> 
> 
> > From: "marsha" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[email protected]>
> Subject: Re: [Chihuahuas] Table Scraps
> Date: Wed, 10 Jan 2007 16:10:40 +0000
> 

---------------------------------


A lot of people feed a raw diet or a barf diet. I do
not have a lot of knowledge of those, so I wont
comment on them and will save that for others who do,
but I do know that those diets are different from
scraps. Those diets are specifically prepared with the
nutritional needs of the dog in mind. Feeding scraps
fails to take into consideration those needs.

Personally, I don't allow my chis ANY table food.
There are too many additives and salt ect in table
food, but my family sneaks them treats all the time.
Against my wishes, lol. I don't think there is really
anything wrong with the occasional treat or taste of
what is on your plate, as long as it is not something
toxic to dogs (research toxic foods!!) BUT, I would
definitely not feed them table scraps as their source
of food.

Cottage cheese and yogurt are great for dogs with
upset stomachs and I keep it on hand for them at all
times. Corn is not dangerous and is used as a filler
in most dog foods, but it has little or no nutritional
value. green beans are often recommended by vets as
something to use for overweight dogs...it curbs hunger
but has few calories, so if a dog is overweight from
over eating (and not due to a medical condition)
greenbeans are good to add to their dog food to help
fill them up.

Make sure that you give the same safety considerations
to the dog's meat as you would for yourself. Keeping
them safe from salmonella poisoning, ect. Do not give
them any cooked bones in the meat and supervise if you
choose to give uncooked bones.

Broccoli, asparagus, and carrots.....I do not know if
these are toxic for dogs or not...maybe someone else
will know.....

Marsha

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Barry 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Wednesday, January 10, 2007 10:40 AM
Subject: [Chihuahuas] Table Scraps


Hi All,
First question, Bitsy our new pup will eat almost
anything she is just 8 weeks old. Any pros or cons on
feeding table scraps
to our new chihuahua.
She eats asparagus, broccoli, carrots, green beans,
meat, chicken
and cottage cheese, added to kibble.
Not all at once of course.
Barry and Sue 

__________________________________________________________
Need a quick answer? Get one in minutes from people who know.
Ask your question on www.Answers.yahoo.com

 

Reply via email to